Login / Signup

Genome-Wide Association Study in Outbred Heterogeneous Stock Rats Identifies Multiple Loci for the Incentive Salience of Reward Cues.

Christopher P KingApurva S ChitreJoel D Leal-GutiérrezJordan A TripiAlesa R HughsonAidan P HorvathAlexander C LamparelliAnthony GeorgeConnor MartinCeline L St PierreHannah V BimschlegerJianjun GaoRiyan ChengKhai-Minh NguyenKatie L HollOksana PolesskayaKeita IshiwariHao ChenLeah C Solberg WoodsAbraham A PalmerTerry E RobinsonShelly B FlagelPaul J Meyer
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Addiction vulnerability is associated with the tendency to attribute incentive salience to reward predictive cues; both addiction and the attribution of incentive salience are influenced by environmental and genetic factors. To characterize the genetic contributions to incentive salience attribution, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in a cohort of 1,645 genetically diverse heterogeneous stock (HS) rats. We tested HS rats in a Pavlovian conditioned approach task, in which we characterized the individual responses to food-associated stimuli ("cues"). Rats exhibited either cue-directed "sign-tracking" behavior or food-cup directed "goal-tracking" behavior. We then used the conditioned reinforcement procedure to determine whether rats would perform a novel operant response for unrewarded presentations of the cue. We found that these measures were moderately heritable (SNP heritability, h 2 = .189-.215). GWAS identified 14 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for 11 of the 12 traits we examined. Interval sizes of these QTLs varied widely. 7 traits shared a QTL on chromosome 1 that contained a few genes ( e.g. Tenm4 , Mir708 ) that have been associated with substance use disorders and other mental health traits in humans. Other candidate genes ( e.g. Wnt11, Pak1 ) in this region had coding variants and expression-QTLs in mesocorticolimbic regions of the brain. We also conducted a Phenome-Wide Association Study (PheWAS) on other behavioral measures in HS rats and found that regions containing QTLs on chromosome 1 were also associated with nicotine self-administration in a separate cohort of HS rats. These results provide a starting point for the molecular genetic dissection of incentive salience and provide further support for a relationship between attribution of incentive salience and drug abuse-related traits.
Keyphrases